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What Hooked You On TOS?

I was always bothered by the episode where Kirk was split into two functioning people who were polar opposites. Mostly, of course, because "Evil" Kirk attacked Rand. And it got so much attention that scene, with multiple camera angles, loving close-ups of it happening, etc. None of the other 'scary' moments or episodes ever had any affect on me. It was just more STAR TREK, as far as I was concerned. But that Rand, who was so cool and so womanly was the target really bothered me. Why not some nameless extra? It made me wonder, whenever I first saw it, if this is what STAR TREK had in store for me, from now on? Was the camp and silliness over? I don't think I like this ... Fortunately, everything worked out just fine.
 
I liked it in the 70s but was not a rabid fan till the early 80s. One day something just clicked after watching the double episodes shown on Saturday afternoon..a remember the day but not the episodes.

I liked the ideas mainly: advanced beings who used humans for sport with total moral disregard; a planet that used computers to fight war without physical violence; can computers really do what humans do(ok they dropped the ball on that one, but they DID ask the ?); what happens when we create the ultimate weapon, will we control it?
 
Time travel. I'd watched STAR TREK on and off throughout the first season, but was torn between watching the show or its competition, BEWITCHED. When the season was mostly over, a blurb in the local paper said that fans of THE TIME TUNNEL should check out tonight's STAR TREK ("City On The Edge Of Forever"). Since I was a fan of THE TIME TUNNEL, I did just that, and the show delivered - big time. From that moment on, I was a STAR TREK fan, and enjoyed the first season reruns that summer.
 
I was made into a lifelong fan of TOS because of the action and adventure in deep space. ;)

Exactly. As a ten year old it was the perfect storm of qualities that I wanted. A perilous adventure, a brave leader, exotic alien races and locales, a team of heroes who you could look up to, cool technology and so on. And not moronic like Lost in Space with Dr. Smith ruining every scene he was in. Even as a kid I more adult sci-fi. LOL

Then as I grew older and the themes about peace and tolerance and moral decisions to be dealt with added more to the mix. It's timeless for me -- despite acting styles and FX issues and continuity errors and all the things people who might start watching it now might have standing in their way to liking it.
 
To be honest it was also a very scary show! Something that later Treks weren't able to repeat in their adventures! Some of their stories were unsettling to say the least! The Salt Vampire, Woman with no face, Mitchell's eyes, The Gorn, the woman on Memory Alpha etc...
JB
I think alot of that has to do with age. As a small child in the 70s, yeah some of TOS scared me, but by the 80s, when I was a teen (for whatever THAT'S worth) TNG didn't scare me hardly at all, if ever.
 
I think alot of that has to do with age. As a small child in the 70s, yeah some of TOS scared me, but by the 80s, when I was a teen (for whatever THAT'S worth) TNG didn't scare me hardly at all, if ever.

That's what I mean, Randy! TOS did scare us as kids but the other Trek shows never did! Despite us being a lot older as well those other series never seemed as good or as unsettling!
JB
 
I was made into a lifelong fan of TOS because of the action and adventure in deep space. What was your motivation to become a TOS fan?
^^^^
Pretty much the same thing. I saw my first Star Trek episode in 1969 (Elaan of Troyius) on NBC at age 6 and was hooked ever since. I remember later when I was around 12 years old and watching in syndication; the episode that I really tjhought a good job mixing character moments and action/suspense was The Corbomite Maneuver which is still my favorite episode of Star Trek across all the Star Trek franchise series, even today.
 
World building. Although I didn't know that was what it was called back then.

It was not just a show, it was an entire universe. There were maps (fan made) and ships and diagrams. Food from plomeek soup to tranya. Real sounding locations. There wasn't just the Enterprise, there was an entire fleet. People could transfer from one ship to another. These ships could be flown and had specific tools, fuels, functions, etc.. (so it seemed)

It felt like a cohesive universe that I could live in. I knew enough about Star Trek that it seemed and felt real. You could fell it, touch it, completely immerse yourself in it and feel like you were there.
 
I wasn't around when TOS was on the air, but my brother was. Later, whenever he used to watch the reruns in the early 70's, I'd watch too in fascination as a 5-7 year old. Initially what attracted me were the special effects I think. Sometimes, instead of playing cops and robbers with my friends using our toy guns, we'd play "Star Trek" and I had a place in the yard set up where I'd pretend there was a transporter room and bridge. When they tried to shoot me, I'd be in the middle of beaming up. I could only get away with it so long because most of my friends didn't like 'Trek. My dad knew I liked the show and brought home a die cast metal Enterprise that would shoot torpedoes out the front and a couple of phasers, both obtained from a local auction. I still have both. When I turned older, I must have grown a liking for the music: I recorded the theme onto cassette tape and then walked around the neighbourhood playing the theme on a portable cassette player. I wanted all three themes, but the local tv station at the time seemed to only be showing episodes from the 2nd/3rd seasons, then one day they suddenly started showing 1st season ones. I was about 8-10 at this point and recorded the latest theme onto cassette, but knew there was still an episode where there was no voiceover (Where No Man), so waited patiently for days until that episode was aired. I was excited when I finally captured it's theme onto cassette. I was also thrilled one time when a first season episode aired where the voiceover wasn't perfect. When Shatner said "It's five year mission. To explore strange, new worlds....", there was NO pause between "mission" and "to", but a large gap after that. I don't know if this was a blooper or what, but I had it on tape for years. The underlying theme wasn't affected, only his voiceover. I still may have the "ancient" cassette somewhere with that. It was within one of the first ten episodes using the original electronic violin theme and his voiceover. Much later, as a teen, I spent a lot of free time doing sound editing of the music, again onto cassette at first. I especially like the "fight" music of both Where No Man and the same music used for Alternative Factor, and I would piece together cassette edits so I would get as much music as I could without the dialogue or effects. My great set up in those days was a VCR feeding a cassette deck. I did have most of the episodes either recorded off of the local TV station at that point, or started purchasing them as VHS whenever I could. Later, I actually did graduate to a 1/4' reel to reel deck and would cut and splice together the music. I also started trying to grab off sound effects as purely as I could. This was a bit before the GNP Crescendo Sound Effects release, which I later did get, but would still try recording, splicing, and cutting sound effects appearing in the show that weren't on the CD. Most of the time, the result was barely passable as there was generally too much background or tape noise as the effects would be recorded at low volume (like the other three alien planet surface sounds that never made it onto the CD). Later, digital noise filtering helped somewhat, but there was still plenty of compromise because digitization manipulation tends to add artifacts easily if the signal's not strong enough to start with. Just this past decade, I was especially thrilled to see La La Land release all of the original music, which I quickly obtained. The sound effects I sought after still weren't present, although an apparent early version of one of the alien planet surface sounds was (Spock's Brain), but I just about died for the music! And, yes, I still did some edits and re-edited some of the Alternative Factors scenes using mostly the music from Where No Man, but this time all done on a PC. That's my story, leaving out some, but that's mostly my interest. A bit OCD, maybe. Often thought I had a touch of it. I also wanted to add, just for the record, that much of the audio sound effects appearing on both the DVD and Blu Ray are NOT what they sounded like originally, especially the alien planet surface sounds. They remixed most of them to make "surround sound" and for other purposes and the way to the originals is either VHS or laserdisc.
 
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I was captivated by the idea... exploring the unknown universe, and the characters. Kirk was so handsome and Spock was so cool, and the stories were just so fantastic (literally)! Like many others, TOS taught me at a very early age to continue to expand my imagination. I dearly love every episode, and can't wait to get the Vault.
 
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